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Is in fact possible ;) But not with an acoustic guitar! Just take your electric guitar, place a microphone close in front of your strings, the closer to the point where you hit the strings, the better (I used a SM57 with some pretty convincing results), set your amplifier on a clean sound and start recording!

This way the position of the microphone is far less important for the sound, because the real "warm" sound comes from the amplifier on the background, while your strings give you the acoustic touch. Don't bother playing with a plectrum, this makes too much noise, instead play with your fingers only. For extra tweaking and mixing afterwards you could choose to place an extra microphone in front of your amplifier too.

This appears to work the best with a set of new strings. Here is a file with a track in which I used my electric guitar to create acoustic sound:
72.29.83.36/~mutelive/dreamon.mp3

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anonymous Sun, 12/11/2005 - 08:43

Thanks for all the positive feedback!

Some more facts about the recording
The guitar I used is an Gibson Les Paul Studio, with the rythm element selected. At the moment of recording I used new D'Addario strings 9mm. I recorded it with a good old fashion SM57 as mentioned in my post.

I played through a Line6 Spider II, with the amplifier model in the red twang, without effects, with a little more bass and less treble to make it a little more warm-sounding. The volume of the amplifier was low, but still audible.

The amplifier was on estimate 1,5-2 meters away from the microphone. I placed the microphone as said earier close to the strings, and turned it so that it pointed to the point where I hit the guitar.

Oh and I doubletracked it, but that's pretty obvious ;)

CoyoteTrax Sun, 12/11/2005 - 10:46

I assume the effect is even more convincing on tape using 11's instead of 9's.

I've always loved the acoustic qualities of my Strat but I play with 11's for a much more robust tone.

Just a thought.

Sander I think you just saved a lot of guitarists a lot of money by not having to go out and pop a couple hundred dollars on a cheap chinese acoustic for just 1 or 2 cuts on their demo or EP.

Maybe Dave will make this thread a sticky for it's intrinsic value

anonymous Sun, 12/11/2005 - 18:55

The reason I tought of this was actually just that, the lack of a good sounding acoustic guitar. I borrowed our bassguitarist my Aria, and after he did to it wat, well, bassguitarists do the guitar had an e-string replaced by a D, wich basically disables you to produce anything decent.

I was actually a little bit suprised by the way it sounded, and after some other guitarists judged the sound who could not hear the difference between this and "the real thing" I figured this could be handy for studio-recordings.. Perhaps even live-performance because it eliminates the possibility of a microphone that starts singing in the body of the acoustic guitar. And it's ofcourse somewhat less expensive than a Line6 Variax acoustic..

As for the 11's, I have a set here wich I'll use to replace my current strings, and I'm definitely going to experiment some more with them. One would indeed expect the tone to be more sustaining, and probably also relatively louder, wich could contribute a lot to the sound.

anonymous Thu, 12/15/2005 - 21:07

And here it is, my first acoustic track recorded with 11-strings. It sounds a bit warmer, more convincing than with the 9-strings. This time a little bit of EQ is applied to make it fit with the rest, and an almost unnoticable delay is added to it.

The song may be familiar to some of you ;)
[[url=http://[/URL]="http://www.mute-liv…"] moonlight_shadow-06.mp3[/]="http://www.mute-liv…"] moonlight_shadow-06.mp3[/]

anonymous Sat, 12/17/2005 - 08:41

Actually it's my sister and we recorded this for the 50th birthday of our father :) I recorded her with 2 microphones, so you have some kind of "natural" stereo-effect, added a little reverb, and some delay (apart from the selective "shadow"-delays that belong to the song itself).

It's more of a hobby project, I'm in no way a professional studio-engineer or whatsoever.